Fighting dog gets its revenge

Stranger than fiction

Police who broke up a dog-fighting ring in Florence County, S.C., apprehended fleeing suspect Edward Windham, 32, after one of the dogs involved "took him down," according to Sheriff Kenney Boone. (Myrtle Beach's WMBF-TV)

Police who accused Joseph Reardon, 22, of robbing a crowded convenience store in Seabrook, N.H., said that he forced his way to the front of the line at the cash register and then ran out of the store with cash. He left behind a jacket, a loaded handgun and a car key. Detective Scott Mendes said officers found the intended getaway car parked nearby and spotted their keyless suspect hiding in a tree. (Manchester's WMUR-TV)

Firebuggery

The Army acknowledged that it caused a wildfire outside Fairbanks, Alaska, that forced the evacuation of 1,200 people, scorched some 80,000 acres and cost $5.5 million to suppress by conducting artillery training with high-explosive ammunition during a high-wind warning. A 14-week investigation resulted in a promise by the Army to be more careful in the future. (Anchorage's Alaska Dispatch)

Firearms follies

Nashville authorities arrested David White, 22, for firing a bullet through his floor into the apartment below and striking a woman asleep in bed. The woman was hospitalized in serious condition. White explained he had been "playing around" with the gun when it accidentally discharged. (Nashville's The Tennessean)

An "accidental misfire" occurred at an elementary school in Chino, Calif., when a student pulled the trigger of an AR-15 rifle mounted on a police motorcycle that was on display during a safety demonstration at an anti-drug event. Police official Tamrin Olden said two students were taken to the hospital for minor injuries, likely caused by metal debris after the weapon fired. (Los Angeles' KTLA-TV)

Employees of a bank in Adelphi, Ohio, locked the doors and called 911 after they spotted four men get out of their cars with guns. A few minutes later, the men got back in their cars and left, but the employees gave sheriff's deputies a good description of the vehicles, along with their license numbers. Investigators who stopped the vehicles discovered that the four men had arranged online to meet to buy guns from each other, according to Sheriff George Lavender Jr., who commented, "What more stupid a thing could you do than set right there in a picture window, loading and unloading a gun?" (Columbus' WTVN-TV)

Shirking-class follies

Gary P. Bojczak bought an illegal GPS jamming device for his company-owned pickup truck so his boss couldn't track his movements. When he drove by New Jersey's Newark International Airport, however, the jammer interfered with a new GPS-based guidance system designed, according to its maker, Honeywell, to "increase airport capacity, decrease air traffic noise and reduce weather-related delays." Federal agents tracked the jamming signal to Bojczak, who was fined $31,875 and fired. (New York's WCBS-TV)

Window dressing

The American League of Lobbyists, the Washington, D.C., association that lobbies on behalf of lobbyists, asked members to approve a new name that omits the word "lobbyist." "Everybody has the misconception that lobbyists are walking around with a pocketful of cash, and that's about it," Monte Ward, the group's president, said. "The new brand will seek to fully represent the broad range of responsibilities that a government relations professional practices daily." The proposed new name is the Association of Government Relations Professionals, with the tag line "Voice of the Lobbying, Public Policy and Advocacy Professions." (The Washington Post)

Nature's recyclers

Barnacles have joined the list of 267 marine species known to eat plastic debris that litters the world's oceans, according to a study that found a third of the barnacles caught in one North Pacific region had ingested plastic particles. Researchers Miriam Goldstein of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Deborah Goodwin of the Sea Education Association said they aren't sure whether these particles harm the barnacles' health, although they observed no signs of digestive backup. "The barnacles just poop out the plastic & it floats away again," Goldstein tweeted. (LiveScience)

Mother of the week

The FBI charged Jennifer Marie Vargas, 34, with assault after she nearly pulled off her 6-year-old son's genitals because she was angry with him. According to the criminal complaint affidavit filed in San Antonio, Texas, Vargas cleaned the wound with alcohol and then "applied superglue to the scrotum until the bleeding stopped, stuffed his underwear with paper towels, and then told him to go to bed." When the child's father came home from work, he found the boy crying in an upstairs bedroom, noticed the bloody towels in his underwear and took him to the hospital. (Houston Chronicle)

Machete mania

During an argument at a home in Myrtle Beach, S.C., Gary Andrew Troute, 57, brandished a machete and threatened Stephanie Troute, 40. A neighbor tried to intervene with his own machete, according to police, who confiscated both weapons while they tried to sort out the events. (Myrtle Beach's The Sun News)

Unclear on the concept

Azerbaijan's Central Election Commission released the results of this year's presidential election on the day before voting took place. It showed President Ilham Aliyev receiving 72.8 percent of the vote. Aliyev won the actual election with 84.5 percent. (The Washington Post)

Not-so-fun house

An explosion that blew out the wall of a warehouse and shook buildings blocks away in downtown Orlando, Fla., was caused by experimental cooking fuel. Fire Assistant Chief Rich Wales said that the fuel, a derivative of butane, was being stored in a 5-foot-tall cylinder by the building's owner, Aaron Fechter, who is credited with inventing the Whac-A-Mole arcade game and builds robot rock bands for Chuck E. Cheese's and ShowBiz Pizza Place. Investigators believe that an animatronics machine inside the building malfunctioned and ignited a tank of experimental cooking oil. The street was littered with debris that included animatronics, old arcade games and clown suits, according to witness Tim Roth, 59, who added, "It was weird." (Orlando's WKMG-TV and Orlando Sentinel)

Deus ex machina

When fans of two rival soccer teams faced off on an escalator at a train station in Helsingborg, Sweden, a fight seemed inevitable. Just then, according to Swedish Transport Administration official Linda Carlen, the escalator malfunctioned because it was overloaded and abruptly sped up, throwing some fans into the air and ending the confrontation. (United Press International)